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A Warehouse of Death. Adult Drama. Of Life in a Retirement Home. (standard:drama, 7480 words) | |||
Author: Oscar A Rat | Added: Jun 27 2020 | Views/Reads: 1426/996 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
In his 80s, Steve moves into a nursing home. The story switches back and forth as he reminisces about his past life on a farm, in the army during WWII, and the present. He goes out with a bang, not a whimper. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story field and nobody even notice." "Yes, Dad," Jeff interrupted. "It's your time to quit. We've found a nice retirement home for you. A place where you'll be comfortable and can lie back, secure. Your insurance and Social Security will pay for it." "My heart's okay. Doc Evert says so." "But your blood pressure's far too high, not to mention arthritis and diabetes. Here it is, October, and you still haven't planted half your acreage." "I'll get to it. It's that new tractor. New isn't always better. I ought'a take it back. Too damned complicated. Once I master the damned thing, I'll catch up." He shook his head. "Just takes time, like with anything. Takes time." "You haven't got that time, Dad. Face it. You're old and worn out," from Jeff. "We'll all get that way sometime, Daddy." "I'm not dead yet. I've got a few good years left." "It's time, Daddy. Time to retire. Time to enjoy what time you have left." "You've lost money the last few years, Dad. Why keep fighting the devil, when you can lie back and enjoy the fruits of your labor?" This time he'd been convinced by the others. He couldn't, as hard as he tried, refute their arguments. It would have been foolish not to admit they were right, and Steve was no fool. It was becoming impossible for him to keep the house clean, much less take care of the few animals. I suppose it is better to shut the business down, he thought. He would miss old Spike, his dog, and faithful Homer the retired plow horse. Well, like Homer, I guess it's my time, he admitted to himself, to be put out to pasture.... *** To Steve, being used to long periods of isolation, the occasion of his incarceration looked like a convention. Half of his large family accompanied him to the Old Folks Home. The large reception area, the farmer noticed, didn't have that hospital smell, more the sweet odor of hand-lotion he'd used at work. Pretty young girls in starched pale-green uniforms hurried back and forth, some seen standing outside in the fresh air, smoking cigarettes. Steve wondered when he'd next smell fresh air? Air coming off freshly-plowed earth? The odor of hay stacked in the upper reaches of his barn. HIS barn, the hay put there by HIS own efforts. He really wished for a smoke. He really did. Did he remember to bring his pipe and tobacco? Would he even be allowed to enjoy a comfortable bowl, legs propped up after a hard day's labor? Or would he have to sit out in the rain and cold for such a simple pleasure...? "Mary's got you signed in, Daddy," Emily said, bringing him back to reality by grabbing an arm. "Let's us go check out your room. Number 221, the nurse said." Steve resisted being forced into a wheelchair. "It's house rules. One the insurance company insists on for admission," a nurse told him. "But only until you get to your room." "I can still walk, damn it, Jeff," he blustered, head held back steeply to look at his grinning son. It all felt so strange, surreal. At well over six-feet, it was the first time he could remember when he had ever had to look up at the kid. "You got all my stuff here? Don't lose nothing, now." "We got it, Daddy. Don't worry." They walked, all except Steve, down a long polished hallway to a room near the end and a door exactly like all the others. As he was pushed along, Steve glanced curiously into each room they passed. Briefly, he wondered where all those old people had come from -- before realizing he looked just the same to them. Where had that young man gone? The one who fought over in Germany in the Big One? What happened to the boy who plowed fields with a wooden plow-handle held under his chin -- leather traces clasped in tiny hands while directing huge plow-horses in making a straight furrow? Whatever happened to the boy who had his first drunk on his daddy's hard cider while hiding in the barn, then tried to ride the goat, getting a broken leg for his trouble? That one! The one who proudly told his mother about having his first sex with a neighbor girl and was locked in his room for days afterwards, hearing his mother crying in hers? Now he was nothing but another old man in a warehouse full of them, all waiting for alternating trips to a hospital and back ... until the day they didn't come back. "Get the hell out of my way. You hear me?" Steve grabbed the wheels on his chair with slightly arthritic hands and charged ahead, leaving the others to stand and stare at each other. *** Steve stayed in his room for a week, coming out only to eat. He would wait until mealtime was almost over, go to the lunchroom, fill his tray and take it to a table. Then he'd make a sandwich. If it were only soup, he'd dump it into a disposable cup, returning to his room to eat alone. Although there was no lock on it, his door stayed closed. As part of the rebellion, Steve avoided taking his medicine. When a nurse or aide came in he would be as unsociable as possible, trying to discourage them from coming back. The man didn't realize that his rejection was normal; that many residents do the same thing at first. The staff and others were used to the process and waited him out. Many of the other residents, remembering going through the same process, simply waited. While back at the farm, Steve had found that he felt more alert without certain medications. He'd grown used to picking and choosing which to take according to how he felt at the moment. Here, they did the choosing, always all the doctor ordered. Sure, he drifted off sometimes but when he did he found it easier to hold on to ever-more valuable memories. Not recent ones, but those of long-gone and better times. Given a choice, he preferred the past. They were memories of his own parents and the kinship of a large farm family -- four generations living under one roof. Of a time when he had energy, and enough to spare. He wished he had saved some of that energy for the present, when he needed it. He also had the bad ones, such as about Mike and Jerry in the war.... *** "Damn it, Steve. That was close. They don't have any respect for this uniform," Mike bitched, trying to crouch lower in a shared foxhole. "None at all. Why don't you go over there and trade Jerry's .50cal for some .30 for us? You could throw in that useless .45 while you're at it." They were huddled in a foxhole in the Grünewald forest outside Nuremberg, shells from German 88mms whistling overhead, through, and over thick trees, toward the tank park. Random explosions came from an ammo dump -- hit two days before -- where shells were still cooking off from the heat. No one had been able to put the fire out. Not amid fresh cannon fire. "No thanks, but I'll keep the pistol. You're jealous ‘cause you don't have one." Steve lay, legs stretched out on a poncho, back against an earthen wall while trying to get a little sleep with all the noise keeping him awake. He'd long ago gotten used to creepy-crawlers running across his face. Mike drew his head back from the rim of the foxhole. It was dangerous to look out toward the enemy but necessary for peace of mind. Jerry, Mike, and Steve took turns watching, afraid that if they didn't the Krauts would sneak up on their hole. The three had plenty of ammo, but not the right kind. Jerry had been the third-man on a three-man .50cal team, the other two being killed earlier. He was still carrying belts of machine gun ammo across his chest, but they needed more 30.06 for M1 rifles and rounds for Steve's extra .45 pistol. They hoped they had enough to keep up an intermiten fire at the enemy. Spraying the countryside didn't hit anything but might keep the enemy's heads down, and them from crawling up to the hole to toss a potatomasher grenade in. About that time, a head appeared over the rim behind them. Jerry and Mike spun around, hearts beating fast, and raised their weapons. It was Edwards, another GI. He scowled and dropped a canvas package in then, without a word, disappeared again -- not wanting to be exposed for small talk. The bundle fell on Steve's chest, jerking him back to full-consciousness and causing a "Whoof" to explode from his lungs. "Mo-ther-fuck-er!" Steve yelped, sitting up to claw at leather straps. "What the fuck is it?" Mike asked, leaning over while Jerry raised his rifle and fired three un-aimed shots at the enemy. "Ammo, I hope?" "Na. Mail and more C-rats," Steve passed them out. "And a box of D-cells for your flashlights. Anyone have any flashlights?" The others shook their heads. They heard a whistle blast three times. It was from the new second Louie, the idiot's idea of a code. None of them remembered what it meant until Steve, still sitting, put the empty canvas bag over his head and lit a match next to his face to read a scribbled note giving the codes. "It means get ready. We're supposed to attack when we hear two then one," he reminded the others. "All that whistling does is get the Krauts on their toes to expect us," Steve complained. Nevertheless, they gathered up their gear and got ready. That was the worst part -- half-standing, muscles bunched up ... and waiting. Once the charge started, they wouldn't have time to be frightened. They'd be too busy trying to stay alive -- and killing. The signal came. Not wanting to be too anxious, the three waited until they could hear running and the clanking of gear going past their hole before scrambling up and joining the charge. Nobody wanted to be in front. The air abruptly filled with the buzzing of bullets from small arms, overriding a duller booming from the direction of the ammo dump. The staccato ripping of Nazi machine guns rose higher in both volume and intensity as Allied troops advanced toward dug-in enemy positions. Steve felt a tug on his shirt as a bullet clipped the cloth and kept on going. Not taking time to shoot back, he put all his effort into running. Running through a hail of hot lead toward Jerry, already a few yards ahead on his left, with Mike crouched and advancing on the other side of Jerry. Steve could see other dark shapes staggering around him as he stumbled across uneven sometimes slippery ground, with an occasional flash as one man or another fired un-aimed rounds at enemy positions ahead of them. Steve saw Jerry break stride and fall end over end into a slumped pile of flesh. With no time to stop, Steve slowed down enough to see his buddy rising to his feet. Maybe he just slipped in the mud or stumbled over one of the many logs, loose legs, and piles of refuse? Seeing flashes directly ahead of him, Steve stopped for a moment, panting with exertion. He fired aimed shots at the flashes then, attaining a second wind, resumed his mad dash. Although frightened out of his wits, he couldn't let his buddies down. The smell of crap and fear was almost palpable around him as he saw Jerry drop into an unseen enemy shell hole. By the time Steve got to his friend, it was over, as a figure in a German helmet pulled a bayonet out of Jerry's chest. As the man turned, Steve emptied the last three rounds in his magazine into the man, dropping the German soldier in his tracks. There was a loud metallic "ping" as the breach of his M1 stood open, empty. Jumping into the hole, Steve paused to shove another eight round "strip clip" into his weapon, the hot chamber burning his fingers. Jamming the cartridges into the magazine with his thumb, he brought the rifle to bear over the opposite rim -- all in one practiced motion. He could see a half-dozen individual battles going on in the dark. Uniform colors were impossible to make out. Steve couldn't tell friend from foe. The whoosh of a parachuting flare brought a bizarre blinding-white light to the horrible scene, illuminating a picture straight out of hell; a bloody portrait of useless carnage. The battleground resembled a lunar landscape, dotted with human remains. It was interspersed with small, extremely vital, contests between gray and green-clad adversaries locked in individual combat. Steve braced himself on a sandbagged shelf and fired single shots as fast as he could aim, aware the flare wouldn't last long. He noticed Mike standing near the hole, bending over and choking a German soldier. As Steve watched, Mike suddenly straightened with a jerk, then fell over, even as the flare fizzled out. Steve also remembered the retreat, back to where they had started from, half his remaining platoon dying from shots in the back. The attack had been only one useless episode in an endless war.... No. All his memories weren't good ones. As he lay back in the metal hospital-type bed, alone in his room, the old farmer tried to dredge up something nice to counter the last, coming up with.... *** "You didn't say if you like the potato salad?" Lois, his wife, jibed as they sat under a young elm tree at the edge of the field, eating a picnic lunch. "I used my very own spices, from my very own garden," she reminded him, reaching over for another beef and homemade cheese sandwich. They were sitting under the tree, Dobbin a dozen yards away, the plow-horse temporarily relieved of traces and chomping his own grass-based lunch. The sweet smell of recently turned earth swept over the scene, even as helpful sunlight aided in drying sweaty clothing. Both helped in lulling stiffness from Steve's muscular body. Lois had surprised Steve with an entire meal for them both, rather than only sandwiches for him. It was easy to forget dirty sweaty hands and clothing and imagine them sitting in Appleby Park while courting. "It's wonderful, dear," he replied, gulping lemonade from a glass tumbler, feeling the chilled liquid drip down a filthy chin. It was a hot muggy overcast day in Illinois. It would have been a good time to sit on the front porch, watching the sun go down from a slowly-moving squeaking porch-swing. Maybe they would do that later, but for now it was still beautiful with a breeze rustling the oilcloth, keeping flies and skeeters out of their food. The breeze also stirred Lois's long dark hair, blowing it to one side and across her lovely face as she turned her head. He didn't want to go back to work, but knew he had to. A farmer doesn't have an option to quit in the middle of the day. Especially not with a horse to take care of when he's through. Still, he had a little time, and Dobbin wouldn't mind any. Steve rose and went over to sit beside his wife, putting an arm around her and removing the sandwich from her hand as he sat closer. Turning her head toward him, an errant gust stirring soft strands, blowing across her face once more, the only obstruction between questing lips. He kissed her through the strands, neither noticing as the two of them drifted down to the grass alongside open food containers. Both his hands being occupied, it was Lois who unbuttoned his fly, taking charge of preparations for a more active lunch.... "Time for your medication, Mr. Ross." Steve hadn't noticed the nurse's aide come into his room. For her part, the youngster, "Doris," according to a name tag, saw a large wrinkled sunburned white-haired man sitting on a red-plastic padded chair that came with the room. He was staring into space with tears slowly running down both cheeks. Steve could see she was patronizing him. She'd probably tell the doctor he was losing it and they'd up his medication, keeping him even groggier. As senseless as in that long-ago military nuthouse in Germany. He'd been lucky to get out of THERE alive. That memory alone brought a sudden flash of a huge barracks room, beds arranged in endless rows, containing screaming and moaning men. They were, mostly anyway, complete in body though not in mind. He managed to suppress the memory of his cracking up after that long-ago attack and losing his buddies. Anyway, they'd eventually released him into civilian life. As it was, the damned pills were making him sleep his life away. "Here you are, sir. Open up now. I have to watch." She handed him a small paper cup containing his medication. Steve was ready. While Doris had been checking the container, he'd turned his head and pretended to rub his face, dropping a couple of M&Ms into his mouth to transfer to his right cheek. Now, he upended the paper cup, shoving the pills into his left cheek and replacing them with the candy -- which he swallowed. Doris saw his prominent Adam's Apple bob. "That's right. It wasn't so bad now, was it? Thank you, Steven. You don't give me trouble like some of the guests." As she turned to fluff his pillow, Steve ejected damp dissolving pills into his hand. The hell with them. After she left, they went down the toilet. "You coming out for supper, Steven? We have a gentleman who says he knows you." "Who would that be? I didn't see anyone I know in this damned place?" "Well, you know, you haven't been out there to even look. You really should, you know?" She grinned at him as if he were a kid being chastised. Children weren't taught as well as they used to be, Steve thought. In his day, she would have shown more respect for his age. "Yeah, I might," Steve replied. "Who the hell you say it was again?" "Mr. Thompson, Sam Thompson. He says he knew you as a child." "Don't know him. That was one hell of a long time ago." "Well, he told me he used to play with you. Something about a rope in a haymow." Delving back into long-forgotten memories, Steve dredged one up. "I remember him now, he's the guy who busted out my front tooth. But he had a good-looking sister, as I recall." "Her name Mary? There's a woman named Mary who comes to see him about once a week." "Could be. I don't recall her name." Steve struggled to picture them as kids. There was something about a blond girl with long hair and even longer legs who wouldn't have much to do with him. "Sometimes I have a little trouble remembering." As Doris left, the sight of her leaving -- from the rear -- reminded Steve of.... A teasing rear view of a thirteen-year-old girl with long yellow hair down to a shapely butt. He remembered that rear as just starting to spread with puberty, walking away from him as an eleven-year-old boy. He was at the stage where he was beginning to appreciate such things. Mary had finished collecting eggs from the henhouse and was carrying them in a yellow wicker basket lined with newspapers. At the time, a two-year difference in their ages was seen as a huge social gap -- virtually insurmountable. Although he had tried to kiss her while playing, on several occasions, she treated him as a young kid. The girl used to play all their games, wrestling included, with Steve and her brother Sammy. Then one day her mother had called her in for a private talk, leaving Steve and Sammy wondering what they, or Mary, had done wrong. Ever since then, Mary stayed away from the more violent intimate playing, and right when Steve had started to enjoy it, too. Enjoyed rubbing her between the legs and nuzzling tiny breasts. After that private talk, she seemed to prefer acting like an, ugh, lady. "You can't catch me, Steeeeeevy," he heard Sammy call from the ladder to a haymow in the barn, and they were off running. No time for fickle women. Sammy wanted to play Tarzan with ropes hanging from a huge pulley used for hauling bundles of hay into the upper stories of the barn. The rope extended down both sides of the pulley and was tied at the bottom end. They raced up ladders to the top floor of the structure, where Sammy swung out on the rope and made his way down, hand over hand. Steve followed, the rope still swinging from his friend's weight. When Sammy reached the bottom, he stood on solid ground and laughed while tugging the rope back and forth, causing Steve, two stories above him, to swing wildly. Steve lost his grip and slid down too rapidly, burning his hands as he tried to slow himself. The friction pain made him let go and he fell on his face. When Steve climbed back to his feet, he could feel a sharp pain in his mouth. A front teeth was missing. After that, for the next few years, Mary would use its absence as yet another excuse not to date him. "I can't be seen with a toothless idiot like you," she would say, laughing in his face. Of course Steve blamed her brother, not her.... Curious, Steve did leave his room a little early for a change. It wasn't as though there was a lot of action around the place. He was surprised that when he first come out to sit alone at a Formica table in the day room, nobody came over to talk or ask questions. He'd expected a crowd. Oh, a few did greet him later, but not right away, to introduce themselves and shake hands. Steve stopped the girl, Doris, when she passed him. "Where's this Sam guy? I haven't seen him." "I think he's in a room with his sister right now, Mr. Ross. They should be out pretty quick. You want me to tell them you're waiting?" "Hell no. I'm not waiting for them, just sitting here is all. I'll find me a book." He saw a bookcase on the other side of the room and went across to look it over. While he waited, Steve saw a flurry of activity down one of the hallways. Nurses and aides hurried toward some central point. He stopped a man who was crossing near his table. "What the hell's going on down there?" Steve asked. The man shrugged. "Mrs. Peters died, probably. It happens all the time. Nothing to get excited about," the man told him, disinterested. "That's why we're here, to wait until we die. A warehouse of death is all this is." The man walked away toward his own room. It got Steve to thinking. "I don't want to die like that, a useless chunk of meat," he muttered to himself while watching a gurney containing something beneath a white sheet being pushed down the hallway past mostly uninterested residents, and to the front foyer. A woman he presumed to be a doctor followed, writing in a notebook. The picture caused him to shudder. "No. I have to do something before that happens to me. Being hauled away like garbage with nobody even noticing," he muttered under his breath. He was broken out of his introspection by a voice from behind him. "Hey, Steve? Good to see you after all'a these years." It was a small fat man with a fringe of white hair. A woman about their age, fat and leaning on a walker, stood next to him, grinning with a toothless mouth. Na, that can't be Sammy and pretty blond Mary? Steve thought -- but it was. "Sammy? Is that you? You sure have changed." Steve forced himself to smile back. "And Mary looks the same yet, still beautiful," he lied. They sat and talked for over a half-hour. Sammy had done little in life, working in a local factory for forty or so years while Mary had already gone through four marriages and six kids. Steve was glad when Sammy walked his sister to the door. He left quickly, in case Sammy wanted to come back to him. Feeling his eyes tearing and mind a little fuzzy, Steve went to his room to think. What the hell had happened? Where the hell had the real Steve Ross gone to? He would look in a mirror on the few days he shaved, only to see a grizzled stranger. While at home on the farm, he had never noticed, but certainly did here -- in this warehouse of death. *** As time drifted by -- all too quickly -- Steve's short-term memory drifted. At dinner time, he couldn't remember what he'd had for lunch. One day, he could have sworn it was army C-rations, even having an aftertaste of canned ham and lima beans. More and more often, he couldn't remember who he had talked to the day before. The man gave up on remembering dates, a calender on his wall gathering dust. One day was the same as another. He only noticed Sundays because of the church services which he attended. Steve had never been particularly religious in the past, but loosely figured it better to hedge his bets now that he was getting close to those Pearly Gates. Death was a favorite topic of conversation at the Home. It seemed all too often that he would find one of his new acquaintances suddenly missing. In defense of his sanity, Steve adopted the same attitude as in wartime. When someone was missing ... forget them. Don't even ask what happened. If they were still alive, he would see them later. If not ... he didn't want to know. One anonymous visitor to another resident reminded him of a redheaded soldier from the war. It happened soon after Mike and Jerry were killed.... *** After that attack Steve made corporal. For some reason, the lieutenant insisted on using him to train new replacements, recruits straight from basic training in the States. Steve hated the job, preferring to lie in a one-man foxhole he dug himself, alone with his thoughts. "Please, sir," he almost begged, "I can't be responsible for them. I'm jinxed already. They'll only die if they stay near me." "Look, Ross. We all have to do our part. You have those corporal stripes, now use them. You can't fight this war by yourself and they need the help of an experienced soldier." A progression began. At first reluctant, Steve eventually tried, really tried, to salve their fears while hiding his own and to help them survive. It did no good. During the next two attacks, he lost four of those young kids – one a large stupid redhead. They never seemed to live long enough to learn to survive. The saying was that if you lived through the first year of combat you were good for the duration. It took that long to learn the tricks and develop survival instincts. Conversations among themselves didn't help much, reminding him of the safety of what seemed another world, one where you didn't worry about snipers, land mines, and artillery. The quiet of sitting on his porch in the evening, watching the sun go down with Lois. Holding hands, sweet dreams and slow fulfilling sex. He'd be trying to tell them how to survive while they'd interrupt with memories of high school and casual dating, ignoring vital advice then go their own way ... only to die. A few days later, he would be issued more replacements, continuing the useless process. There came the day that he, himself, sensed the uselessness, the futility, of fighting for a set of political lies. Hell, he realized, he knew several Germans in his own army. They being the same as him, with the same thoughts, dreams, and hopes, it must be the same way with Nazis. Wasn't it? Weren't they living people like his German buddies? What god-given right did he have to kill them? He refused to leave his hole for anything. Anything at all. Instead of going to a dug latrine, he crapped in a corner of his foxhole, burying it within the mud. He refused to go to meals, to talk to anyone. Eventually, he didn't even bother to take off his trousers, crapping in them. What was the use? Why live? Why even try? When Steve stayed in his hole, huddled in a fetal position as the enemy attacked, crying out loud enough to hear two foxholes on either side of his, the battalion Chaplin intervened. Steve Ross was sent to the rear, shell shocked, where he stayed for the rest of WWII. The mental hospital helped, kinda. Eventually he stopped shaking and could handle a spoon to feed himself. After that, he lived. Lived in a personal hell, eventually coming out of a paranoid funk.... *** Whenever his lucidity improved -- which wasn't anywhere as often as when he had first arrived -- he could sense himself becoming older. He'd realize changes, none of them good, none reversable. Steve still tried to avoid the medication that made him groggy. He wanted to stay alert to enjoy memories dredged up of long-bygone days -- days when he was young and full of adventure and hope. Why should he contrast the past with the present? As in the war, sometimes it was better to live within memories and screw the present. In time, his old friend Sammy was missing and the man's sister became a resident. Steve preferred to stay away from her; even while she sought him out as her own anchor to the past. He would rather remember her as a teenager and, by avoiding her, could easily do so. One of Mary's grandchildren reminded Steve of a woman he'd met in the Sicily invasion. She'd been a short brunette looking somewhat like his wife, which was the reason he picked her out of a crowd of prostituting women still starving from the Nazi occupation.... Riding on the back of a deuce-and-a-half supply truck, Steve caught her eye. For long seconds, the two stared at each other as though linked by an invisible cable. To him, it was as though looking into a dark blue endless void. As the truck inched along within a crowd of refugees, she smiled, licked cracked lips, motioned to him, turned and slunk away. Steve was off that truck in a flash. The hell with duty. Grabbing his rifle and the rope-handle of a wooden supply crate he'd been sitting on, he ignored cries of two other soldiers and jumped down to run after her. She was surprised as he accosted her, yelling “Senora. Senora, stop.” She did stop, turning to smile once more. Silently, arm and arm, they proceeded to a small shack among a multitude of others, lined up for a block or so along both sides of a dirt street. Steve knew enough by then to recognize a whore street, individual cribs with sliding doors for loose women to work from. She let go of him long enough to talk to a small unshaven man standing nearby. “Ten dollar, American?” the man asked. Steve had enough presence to shake his head. If he'd paid that amount, she'd only receive a fraction, the rest going to the pimp or owner of the building. “One dollar, hundred Lira?” Once paid, the man smiled, sliding back a crib door for them to enter. The room turned out to be very dirty, smelling of cabbage and sweat. It contained a German army cot, a blanket, a dresser, and a lone wooden chair. No electricity or running water. Gabriella knew little English, and Steve damned little Italian, forcing them to communicate in bits of German amid moans and groans of a more natural language. A dozen times during a day and a night, there were knocks on the door, it then sliding back for Steve or Gabriella to hand out another dollar bill. He left her the crate of Spam, minus what they'd eaten during breaks. Steve almost lost his corporal stripe over that incident, though he thought it worth the risk. It had been such a long time between releases.... *** As time at the Home passed, he couldn't recall the names of relatives -- not often, only occasionally -- but he learned to fake it when they came to visit. It was easy. He simply sat, nodding occasionally, and let them talk while lost in his own memories. They never seemed to notice, most coming in for only a few minutes and, even then, glancing down at watches out of the corner of their eyes. For Steve, present time and memories became difficult to sort out. "We still have the farm, Daddy. It's up for sale but nobody wants to pay our price, for now anyways," Jeff offered during a visit. "Who's living there now?" Steve asked, mildly curious. "Well ... no one right now. Cousin Tammy and her family might later." "That's nice. My stuff still there in case I decide to go back there to live?" "Sure. Nobody's packed anything up. Emily took a little furniture. Hers was worn out, but it's mostly the way you left it." His son -- what's his name, Jeff? -- laughed. Steve could tell. Nobody thought he would ever go back. Maybe he would fool them? He could still walk without one of them damned walkers -- although his legs were sometimes pretty stiff in the mornings. He'd have to massage them for a while before getting out of bed. *** Then came the day when he actually did it. In a daze, thinking the street outside the Home was one he remembered from his youth, Steve wandered out of the facility while wondering why the effort wore him out so much. After all, he recalled walking that same route almost every week on the way to Simon Good's general store. Eventually, with the help of several kind motorists amid drifting in and out of lucidity, he found his way back to the farm. *** Steve woke in a strange bed. Well not that strange, he thought -- somehow familiar. "Where the hell did this thing come from?" he exclaimed to himself, remembering he'd gone to bed on an army cot the night before. He noticed he was alone. "And what the hell happened to Mike? Him and Jerry were here ... last I noticed." He pulled himself out of the strange but familiar bed, looking around for his uniform and M1 rifle. They had to be around there somewhere. All he found were civilian clothes. He struggled to put them on. At least they fit. Steve felt so weak, and stiff. Was he wounded? He felt himself over, noticing a heavy growth of beard, which was normal. In combat, Steve rarely shaved. Only when ordered to by an officer. Not finding his rifle, he grabbed a heavy butcher knife from the kitchen and staggered around trying to figure out where he was. It was both familiar, in that he seemed to know where to find things like that kitchen and the knife, but still strange to find them in the middle of Germany. And where is young Mary? He could swear he had seen her recently, nice ass swinging. "I'm kinda confused. What happened?" he asked himself while looking around, puzzled by the location. "Now I'm even talking to myself. Did those fucking Nazi's give me drugs? I feel like I haven't slept for days. "When have I slept? I can't remember the last time. Was it outside Frankfurt? Guess it's alright as long as I don't answer myself." He giggled while loading a .30-30 rifle he had also known where to find in a familiar closet. Grabbing a shotgun, an over-and-under, and stuffing his pockets with shotgun shells and .30-30 cartridges, he shuffled tiredly, on shaky legs, back to the war. "No fucking warehouse for me," Steve told himself, not even knowing where the thought came from. He somehow made it down a set of steep steps from the front porch of a farmhouse. Standing in sunlight beaming onto an overgrown lawn, Steve looked around. It must be France, he finally decided, remembering a series of battles at such farms while there. Anyway, the ambiance was right. Steve recalled how he had been trapped in a cellar there once with no water, having to drink nothing but wine for days. Oh, how the other guys had kidded him about it later. "Where can I make a stand? The Nazi's have to be around here ... somewhere," he realized. Steve thought for a minute, gasping to get his breath. Seeing a large elm tree at the edge of an unplowed field about fifty-yards away, he ran toward it -- or tried his best. His legs seemed stiff and he had to rest several times, leaning on the grounded shotgun. For some reason, one he couldn't fathom, the smell of the bare earth seemed to mix him up ... both familiar and strange. Bending down and picking up a handful of dirt -- fingering and smelling it -- Steve could tell the clay content and how long ago it had been plowed, also that it needed more water before planting. Now, where did he learn all that, he wondered? Oh, yes, he'd been raised on a farm like this one. Funny, but exactly like this one? Shaking his head to clear it, he continued toward the treeline, trying to search with somehow weakened vision – as though through a fine mist -- for any hidden enemy. Just like Daniel Boone, Steve thought, remembering to yell out, "Mike, Jerry! Where the hell are you guys? Come on and stop playing games, Sammy." Who the hell is Sammy? he wondered, and where the hell are the Boche Bastards? Finally making it to the elm tree, Steve had to collapse. He couldn't walk another step. That damned medicine, he decided. What medicine? Seeing activity around the house, Steve fired the shotgun to alert Mike and Jerry that trouble was coming. He didn't know where they were, but hoped they were close enough to hear. He could use some help. Then he saw the Germans, for some reason wearing blue uniforms to further confuse him. "Hey, Ross. Come on, we won't hurt you," one of the Nazis called, trying to fake him out by using English. Steve knew all about those tricks, and who the hell was "Ross"? He hadn't felt so much excitement since the day -- who was it? Mike? -- was killed? No it couldn't be Mike, he's around here ... someplace. "At least my eyes are still good," Steve Ross told himself, getting the proper sight picture on his rifle and squeezing the trigger as he had been taught by Sergeant Robinson in Basic Training. He fired and watched a blue-suited Nazi crumble to the ground.. "Got you, you bastard," Steve gasped weakly, rifle heavy in shaking hands. Looking around, he could see Mike, Jerry, and Sammy lying next to him. What's Sammy doing here? Here in Germany? he thought. No time to wonder now. Gotta kill the enemy. I'll show them I'm not a coward. That the nuthouse was wrong. I can still kill Nazies. He could see Lois and the child, Mary, sitting at a picnic layout, watching the fight. It seemed like old times to hear the crack of firearms and the thud of bullets on the tree beside him, splinters stinging his cheek. Steve felt a sudden, sharp, pain in his side. He knew he was lost, as the rifle dropped from nerveless fingers. Steve, a sudden weakness coming over him, lowered his head to the ground. No warehouse for me, was his last thought, as tired eyes closed on a mental picture of Lois smiling and eating a sandwich while holding out an arm and hand -- motioning him to join her. Mary also grinned, one arm holding out a glass of cool, cool, lemona-- A policeman strolled over, watchful eyes on the old man lying half-behind an elm tree, rifle stretched out in front of him. "What got into that old coot, anyway?" he asked a companion. "Escaped from a loony bin'er somethin', the sergeant said. Anyway, a mental case." "Well." The first shook his head, sadly. "He got George in the leg with that rifle, but won't be bothering anyone else." "One more useless old bastard bites the dust." The End. Tweet
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